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From the docs: -existingObjectWithID:error:

If there is a managed object with the given ID already registered in the context, that object is returned directly; otherwise the corresponding object is faulted into the context.

This method might perform I/O if the data is uncached.

Unlike objectWithID:, this method never returns a fault.

Well, this is paradox!

They say that -existingObjectWithID:error: may return a fault ("faulted into context"). And at the same time, they say that -objectWithID: does return a fault, but -existingObjectWithID:error: does not. So what's true now? Both method descriptions talk about returning faulted objects.

Can someone clear that up?

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  • No need to post this question twice. stackoverflow.com/questions/3006394
    – Emil
    Jun 9, 2010 at 14:13
  • @Emil - This is not a duplicate. It ask a related but different question.
    – TechZen
    Jun 9, 2010 at 21:04
  • @Tech Posted at the same time?
    – Emil
    Jun 9, 2010 at 21:16
  • @Emil - They are still two separate questions. It doesn't matter if he asked them at the same time. That's why no ones voted to close.
    – TechZen
    Jun 10, 2010 at 12:49

1 Answer 1

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Faulted does not mean "make into a fault". It actually means, "create a full fledged object" the opposite of what you expect. In other words, a faulted object is not a fault. The nomenclature is confusing.

It arises because of the term "to fire a fault" from the old DB days. In that term you took a fault i.e. the ghost of an object and "fired" it thus causing it to load its attributes. This got shorten from "firing the fault" to "faulting" which a naive reader/listener would assume means "to make into a fault."

In training, I've used the term "ghost" as a synonym for fault and "materialize" for faulting. It helps clear up the terminology and expresses my childhood love of Scooby-Do at the same time.

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